In spite of a truly
military name, the half-brother of Gettysburg hero John Buford held the rank of major
general for only a few months. Napoleon Bonaparte Buford was born into Kentucky's
plantation society; the West Pointer (1827) served eight years in the artillery and as a
professor at his alma mater. Following his 1835 resignation he settled in Illinois and
engaged in banking, engineering, railroading, and iron.
Financially ruined by the default of Southern
bonds held by his bank, he entered the Union army where his assignments included: colonel,
27th Illinois (August 10, 1861); commanding Flotilla Brigade, Army of the Mississippi
(April 24-26, 1862); commanding lst Brigade, 3rd Division, Army of the Mississippi (April
26-June 25 and September 20-November 1, 1862); major general, USV (November 29, 1862);
commanding District of Eastern Arkansas, 16th Corps, Army of the Tennessee (September 19,
1863-January 6, 1864); and commanding District of Eastern Arkansas, 7th Corps, Department
of Arkansas (January 6 - August 6, September 28 - October 7, 1864, and October 10,
1864-March 9, 1865).
He fought under Grant at Belmont, under Pope at
Island # 10, and under Rosecrans at Corinth. In each of the latter two he directed a
brigade. He served in the very early stages of the Vicksburg Campaign but his appointment
as a major general was not confirmed by the Senate and it expired on March 4, 1863. During
the later part of the war he commanded in eastern Arkansas, with headquarters at Helena.
On leave at the end of the war, he was brevetted major general and was mustered out on
August 24, 1865; he was later a government appointee.